Plus Therapeutics Reports ReSPECT-GBM Clinical Trial Update at the 2024 Congress of Neurological Surgeons Annual Meeting

Plus Therapeutics Inc.
Plus Therapeutics Inc.

In This Article:

Rhenium (186Re) Obisbemeda delivered by convection enhanced delivery (CED) continues to show safety, response, and potential efficacy

Mean Phase 2 absorbed dose was 300 Gy and 89% of patients exceeded the minimal dose threshold of 100 Gy

ReSPECT-GBM Phase 1/2 trial has expanded to two new sites at leading U.S. academic medical centers in New York and Upper Midwest

AUSTIN, Texas, Oct. 01, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Plus Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: PSTV) (“Plus” or the “Company”), a clinical-stage pharmaceutical company developing targeted radiotherapeutics with advanced platform technologies for central nervous system (CNS) cancers presented an update on the ongoing ReSPECT-GBM Phase 1/2 clinical trial, evaluating the Company’s lead asset Rhenium (186Re) Obisbemeda for the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma. The data were presented at the 2024 Congress of Neurological Surgeons (CNS) Annual Meeting on September 30, 2024, in Houston, Texas.

The presentation, titled “Treatment of Recurrent Glioblastoma (rGBM) via Convection Enhanced Delivery (CED) with Rhenium (186Re) Obisbemeda (Rhenium-186 Nanoliposome, 186RNL): ReSPECT-GBM Phase 1/2 Trial Update” was delivered by lead investigator and neurosurgeon John Floyd, M.D., Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio. The data highlights the continued favorable safety profile and encouraging efficacy results of Rhenium (186Re) Obisbemeda in a patient population with historically poor prognosis.

“The ReSPECT-GBM Phase 1/2 trial continues to reinforce the safety signal and potential efficacy of Rhenium (186Re) Obisbemeda in patients with recurrent glioblastoma,” said John Floyd, M.D. “These updated results, particularly the encouraging safety profile and overall survival rates, support the advancement of Rhenium (186Re) Obisbemeda as a promising therapeutic option for this aggressive cancer, and we are currently open and enrolling in our Phase 2 study.”

ReSPECT-GBM is a first-in-human, open-label, Phase 1/2 study investigating feasibility, dose escalation, and critical convection enhanced delivery (CED) parameters to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), maximum feasible dose (MFD), safety, and potential efficacy of Rhenium (186Re) Obisbemeda in recurrent adult glioma (IND 116117).

Key Highlights from the ReSPECT-GBM Phase 1/2 Trial Update:

  • 42 total patients have enrolled thus far at 3 sites and with 19/42 patients having been treated to date at the recommended Phase 2 dose (22.3 mCi in 8.8 mL) in tumors of approximately 20 cm3 or less

  • All Phase 2 patients have recurrent, histologically confirmed glioblastoma; 1 recurrence, bevacizumab na?ve, single tumor of approximately 20 cm3 or less (small-to-medium sized tumors)

  • Average tumor size in Phase 2 was 7.5 mL (range 0.9-22.8 mL)

  • Increases in absorbed dose correlated with specific drug delivery parameters such as infused dose and volume, maximal convection flow rate, and number of catheters

  • Rhenium (186Re) Obisbemeda continues to show a favorable safety profile in the 42 enrolled patients; one dose-limiting toxicity (hemiplegia) has been reported, which was observed in Cohort 8 (41.5 mCi and 16.3 mL)

  • In Phase 2, most adverse events (AEs) were mild (73.5%) or moderate (18.8%), and largely unrelated (37.7%), or unlikely related (27.1%) to the drug. Of the 9 severe adverse events (SAEs), only 2 were related to the study drug

  • Average absorbed radiation dose to the tumor in Phase 2 was 300 Gy (n=18, 1 patient still under analysis)

  • To date, 88.9% of Phase 2 patients met key CED drug delivery parameters shown to correlate with overall survival, achieving a tumor absorbed dose >100 Gy and radiation coverage of >70%

  • 29/42 patients treated thus far participated in the Phase 1 dose escalation phase of the trial (Note: as per protocol, 6/42 patients were included in both the Phase 1 and Phase 2 trial arms and related analyses)

  • Phase 1 dose-escalation increased administered doses from 1.0 mCi to 41.5 mCi and volumes from 0.66 mL to 16.3 mL

  • In terms of objective tumor response based on quantitative image analysis, a statistically significant reduction in tumor volume rate change was seen in tumors receiving > 100 Gy absorbed dose (n=11 patients analyzed to date, p<0.005). Sufficient tumor coverage correlated with tumor control, while regrowth occurred outside treated areas